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Metamorphosis: Evolution in Action
Editor’s note: The fruits of research appear in conversations, conferences, and of course books. Though it is still mostly “outside the mainstream,” anthroposophical research has a further, hidden life, like that of runners from a plant, through a quiet stream of fine books. Also worthy of note is the quality of work coming from authors from whom serious research would not be expected in the mainstream—high school teachers, for example. Both the author of this book and the reviewer were long-time Waldorf high school teachers.
Editor’s note by Frederick Dennehy: In this issue we offer Keith Francis’s review of Metamorphosis: Evolution in Action, by Andreas Suchantke, one of the most important books on Goethean science to appear in years. Readers of this book (and, because it is so incisive and detailed, this review) are likely to come to a fresh understanding of metamorphosis as not only a concept, but as an imaginative activity. Suchantke emphasizes the need to “escape from the idea of a fixed spatial form” and cultivate an intuition of “the inner line, or, rather, the time-gestalt of the whole of evolution.” In a larger context, readers will be challenged to wean themselves from the mechanistic habit of focusing exclusively on what Aristotle termed “efficient cause” and to develop a sense for the neglected “formal cause” or “archetype.” Such a genuinely scientific approach yields a comprehension of living things and of the process of change—metamorphosis— sharply distinguishable from a grasp of the finished world that physicists investigate.
Metamorphosis: Evolution in Action, by Andreas Suchantke. Translated by Norman Skillen. Adonis Press, 2009, 324 pgs.
Review by Keith Francis
My first impression on receiving the review copy of Metamorphosis was “What a beautiful book!” and the discovery that it had been printed in China went some way toward erasing recent impressions of the quality of goods from that country. It is coffee-table sized and the pictures, most of them by the author, are an education in themselves; but as we shall see, Metamorphosis is definitely not a coffee-table book.
Andreas Suchantke, who was born in Switzerland in 1933, taught life sciences at the Rudolf Steiner School in Zurich and worked extensively in teacher training. Apart from teaching, his life’s work has been the development of an ecological understanding of landscapes and traditional cultures, and he has published books on tropical South America, South and East Africa, and Israel and Palestine. In his new book he shows how the fundamental principles implicit in Goethe’s scientific work, together with the insights gained from a lifetime of studying nature’s ways, lead to a far-reaching understanding of the evolution and interrelatedness of all that lives on Earth. In so doing he acknowledges his debt to Rudolf Steiner, and it seems appropriate to allow Steiner to give us a starting point with a few words on the subject of Goethe:
In contemplating the forms of plants and animals Goethe perceived a principle of metamorphosis that enabled him to see each organism as a unity of interrelated parts. He expressed his thoughts on plant and animal morphology in such a way as to suggest principles of growth and being that might apply to the whole process of nature. He saw the development of the plant as a series of alternating expansions and contractions: seed, leaves, calyx, corolla, stamens and pistil, fruit, and, again, seed. To ask for a physical cause for the expansions and contractions is, as Steiner pointed out, to stand the matter on its head.
Nothing is to be presupposed which causes the expansion and contraction; on the contrary, everything else is the result of this expansion and contraction. It causes a progressive metamorphosis from stage to stage. People are simply unable to grasp the concept in its very own intuitive form, but demand that it shall be the result of an external process. They are able to conceive expansion and contraction only as caused, not as causing. Goethe does not look upon expansion and contraction as if they were the results of inorganic processes taking place within the plant, but considers them as the manner in which the entelechy, the principle, takes form.
People who believe that nature consists of nothing but particles, waves, and space feel the need for a mechanism for such processes. I speak with the voice of personal experience when I say that it is very hard, even for those of us who are intuitively drawn to Goethe’s view of nature, to get out of the mechanistic habit. Goethe’s way of expressing things has the cognate disadvantages of provoking facile ridicule from the scientific intelligentsia and receiving uncritical acceptance by the half-baked dilettanti. Suchantke’s book shows that a contemplative biology drawing on the fundamental concepts of Goethean science and imbued with reverence for the living Earth can produce a consistently illuminating picture of life in all its amazing abundance and multiplicity.
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From the beginning, Suchantke emphasizes the need to escape from the idea of a fixed spatial form (space-gestalt):
The principles of metamorphosis apply not only to the development of the individual plant but also to the evolution of species, in which the retention of juvenile characteristics into adulthood (neoteny), and the changing relationships to the environment known as internalization and externalization play important parts in generating a stream of continuous change. In describing these and other time-gestalts, the author says,
Metamorphosis should not be read like a textbook; it asks the reader to entertain the possibility of inner transformation in which the imagination becomes an organ of perception, thus giving the title a double meaning that its author undoubtedly intended.
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It would be impossible to convey the immense richness of Suchantke’s book in the few pages of a review, so I’ll give a brief impression of its contents and concentrate on just one aspect of the author’s thinking.
After giving a vivid account of some of the transformatory processes of nature he tackles the difficult question of the functioning of the archetype in the evolutionary process. He goes on to clarify the concepts of metamorphosis with a discussion of Goethe’s perception of the relation between the bones of the spine and those of the skull, but he doesn’t limit himself to the human skeleton. Salamanders, foxes, moles, bats, hummingbirds, and even cacti are drawn into the discussion, which ends with the perception of polar tendencies that produce both round, immobile, protective structures such as the skull, and mobile, articulated, linear structures like the arms and legs.
Chapter 3 deals with the forms of leaves, showing their relatedness to other parts of the plant and to its functioning within the environment. The theme of sphere and radius, already developed in relation to the vertebral nature of the skeleton, reappears here. “The leaf, we must agree with Goethe, is the ‘true Proteus.’ From top to bottom the plant is all leaf.” From leaf to flower is a transformation that naturally takes us into chapter 4, which deals with the polarity of the two structures and the extraordinary correlations between color and form. Of particular note is the section on the evolutionary potential of the blossoms, in which Goethe’s ideal of intensification reaches a high point. Chapter 5 reviews the functioning of metamorphosis and reminds us that we, as readers, are invited to take part in a process of transformation.
Next comes a chapter on the various forms of metamorphosis in the plant kingdom, in which the ideas of the previous chapters are profusely illustrated and developed. In chapter 7 the principles of polarity and threefold organization are illustrated by the growth of plants from the unity of the seed into the structure of root, leaf, and blossom, the subtlety of which cannot altogether be conveyed by a simple spatial picture. Of great interest is Suchantke’s commentary on the description Rudolf Steiner gives in his autobiography of the gradual development of his perception of the threefold nature of the human being. Chapter 8 is an extended tour de force that demonstrates how polarity and threefoldness are expressed in different ways throughout the animal kingdom. The photographs and drawings are breathtaking.
Chapter 9 brings us back to the archetype. Different groups of creatures emphasize different aspects of the threefold organization and, when viewed together at a moment in time, can be seen as forming a gestalt, momentarily frozen in space. When the gestalt is regarded as “only fixed for a moment” and “about to undergo transformation” we enter “the realm of formation and transformation, of development on the different levels of ontogeny (development of the single individual) and phylogeny (development of the ancestral group, evolution).” “In this way,” Suchantke states emphatically, “the archetype comes to be understood as the initiator of evolution, which is as much as to say as evolution itself.”
This is important enough to repeat in different words:
It seems to me that chapter 9 is the fulcrum of the book, the point at which the final intent becomes clear:
Two further chapters deal with the evolutionary processes of the endo- (inner) skeleton, characteristic of vertebrates, and the exo- (outer) skeleton of the insect world, and finally bring us to the embodiment of the archetype in the human being, in whom evolution “has not only expressed itself in the physical form of a single species, but at the same time has become conscious of itself.”
Evolution does not stop here, however. The capacities of consciousness can be intensified but “there is a vast discrepancy between what we actually achieve and the goals we aspire to, goals which should in principle have been attainable. This is a feeling that can arise in connection with any activity: it could have been better, we should really do it again more thoroughly! The importance of this experience cannot be overestimated because it induces the future and is an expression of the developmental potential of the Self, probably its most important attribute.
This is how Suchantke ends his book, and some readers may feel that although the evolution of human consciousness has been in his crosshairs from the beginning, his conclusion is rather brief and facile. If, however, we say that the further development of the human soul and spirit is a subject that demands another whole book, we must recognize that other whole books have already been written, notably by Rudolf Steiner, whose intimations about the future of this incarnation of our planet make rather uncomfortable reading. This is not surprising since any realistic survey of the past has the same effect.
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Metamorphosis will undoubtedly be both a comfort and a challenge to students of anthroposophy, and may well be a source of inspiration to people who have never heard of Rudolf Steiner. Whether it will have any influence within the scientific community is a different question, one of the problems being the rather partisan tone that the author adopts in speaking of Darwin, his supporters, and modern biological science. Speaking of the idea of the struggle for existence, Suchantke says, “It is often forgotten that this idea was no hard-won conclusion of Darwin’s, but was lifted from a completely different realm of discourse and applied to Nature. He adopted it from Thomas Malthus, whose book An Essay on the Principle of Population attempted to address the effect of world-wide population growth.” This is rather like saying that Niels Bohr filched the idea of quanta from Max Planck and applied it in a different context. Darwin never made any secret of his indebtedness to many of his predecessors, including Malthus, and it’s worth noting that Loren Eiseley, in his masterly Darwin’s Century, puts the matter much more fairly, seeing the gradual evolution of Darwin’s ideas as a process—dare I say, as a time-gestalt—rather than suggesting that he simply plucked a ripe fruit from someone else’s tree. There are more examples of this tendency. Although T. H. Huxley may be “notorious” among anthroposophists and creationists, in other circles “famous” would seem more appropriate—but this is something that could easily be corrected and there is another far deeper problem that is simply in the nature of the enterprise.
Suchantke goes to great lengths to characterize the archetype and its all-pervasive functioning, but it remains a concept that is very hard to get hold of, partly because, like Proteus, it is always changing its form and partly, perhaps, because it isn’t a concept. Proteus had been given the gift of prophecy, but on being questioned he assumed different shapes and eluded his questioners. The archetype does not merely “know” the future; it brings all kinds of different futures about in constantly changing ways and we may well be excused for feeling that we still don’t know what it “really” is. We see what it achieves, but something in us wants to know how it works and where it comes from. These may be unanswerable or even meaningless questions, but we can’t help asking them, and it may be helpful to look at evolution from a different angle, for which the study of Steiner’s Outline of Esoteric Science would be a good starting point. How does Suchantke’s description of the organic development of a vehicle for human consciousness relate to Steiner’s account of the work of the hierarchies, in which the human being has been present from the very beginning? And if we want to know what the driving force for evolution is, we could profitably study The Driving Force of Spiritual Powers in World History, a course which, among many other things, gives the clue to the emergence of the archetype in the form it took in the Middle Ages.
As Suchantke indicates, the very idea of the archetype is likely to promote an acute negative reaction on the part of a modern biologist, even when it is given a new context and a new understanding, and it will take either a catastrophe or a long evolutionary process to change this situation. Nevertheless, Metamorphosis has the ring of truth and will amply repay the contemplative reader.
Keith Francis majored in physics at Cambridge University and worked as an engineer at Bristol Aircraft before joining the teaching profession. He was on the faculty of the Rudolf Steiner School in NY for 31 years as a teacher of physics, chemistry, mathematics, earth science, English and music. Since his retirement he has written several novels and a history of atomic science.